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TRAGEDY IN ANCIENT ATHENS
When we sit in an outdoor theater to see a performance, we repeat an ancient
Athenian ritual. The Greater Dionysia, a religious and civic festival honoring Dionysos,
Greek god of wine and theater, was the most important theatrical event in ancient
Greece. It was probably established by the Athenian tyrant Peisistratos in about 534
B.C. By the turn of the century, performances of plays took place at the Theater of
Dionysos on the south slope of the Acropolis. Later refurbished as part of Perikles’
fifth-century-B.C. civic building program (which included the Parthenon), the theater
accommodated an audience of about seventeen thousand. (A marble seat that
probably came from the Theater of Dionysos is on view in the Museum, Gallery 114,
Dionysos and the Theater.) The dramatists Aeschylus (525–456 B.C.), Sophocles
(about 496–406 B.C.), Euripides (about 484–406 B.C.), and Aristophanes (448–386
B.C.) all wrote plays for competitions held in the theater, and in 428 B.C. Euripides
won first prize for a group of plays that included Hippolytos.
Celebrating the annual spring harvest of grapes, the Greater Dionysia occurred
over approximately a week in the month of Elaphebolion (late March and early April).
The festival was preceded by a proagon (literally “before the contest”), when each
dramatist talked about his play, accompanied by his actors and chorus members. A
masked wooden statue of Dionysos was then carried in procession from his temple
near the theater to a grove on the outskirts of the city, where hymns were sung in his
honor. The next day involved more processions as well as ritual offerings and
competitions of choral dances called dithyrambs—the original form of performance
from which tragedy is said to have evolved.
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The last several days of the Greater Dionysia were given to dramatic
competitions, preceded by religious rituals, civic speeches, and the acceptance of
tribute from Athens’s allies. Each day was devoted to one playwright’s tetralogy—
three tragedies followed by a satyr play, in which actors performed as the hoofed and
hairy, part-human, part-horse followers of Dionysos. Comedies, introduced to the
festival in about 486 B.C., were performed either together on the last day of the
competitions or individually on separate days. Judged by a panel of distinguished
citizens chosen from the ten Athenian tribes, tragic and comic victors were awarded
bronze tripods and ivy-leaf crowns.